By William CrumStaff writerwcrum@oklahoman.comWard 6 Councilwoman JoBeth Hamon says the justice system's tendency to criminalize poverty would be lessened under a measure being considered by the Oklahoma City Council. The measure would establish an amnesty window, giving thousands of offenders who missed court dates a chance to pay a reduced fine, or have fines excused if they cannot pay. "Particularly, because those living in poverty or with a serious mental illness or substance use disorder have obstacles that may be contributing to the fact that they haven’t taken care of these charges previously, this reduces the compounding fees for failure to appear and gets rid of any warrant they might have," Hamon said Monday. Pursuant to an order issued by Municipal Court Presiding Judge Philippa James, the window for resolving low-level offenses would open July 1 and run through March 31, 2020. An individual with an unpaid speeding ticket for driving 1 to 10 mph over the limit could resolve the case for $155. That is close to the cost of the original ticket and a reduction of about 75% from the $613 that accumulates after an individual fails to pay a citation and the court issues a warrant. Individuals who still cannot pay would be offered an indigency hearing in which costs could be excused. Similar savings would be offered for other unresolved traffic offenses, reducing fines and fees to $166, and for nonjury criminal cases, to $161. Ward 8 Councilman Mark Stonecipher, the council's Judiciary Committee chairman, said the program provides an avenue to get lingering cases "off the books, get rid of the warrants.Read more on NewsOK.com

 

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